Hi everyone,
I know it has been a while since I shared a detailed medical
update, but I’ll bring you all up to speed now on what’s been going on for the
last couple months.
I’ll start with the visit to Rush in May. I had a CAT scan to the lungs that showed
stability and a little bit of reduction in the number and size of lesions in
the cancer in the lungs. That was good
news, but my focus was really on the continual degradation of my legs and my inability
to feel my left leg and foot and the start of losing sensation in the right
foot too. The only solution they had for
me was that hopefully the Tarceva would reduce the cancer in the meningeal
lining of the lower spine and that I should keep doing the physical therapy to
make the muscles and nerves rebuild. This
was not a satisfying answer for me.
I had a consultation with a radiation oncologist to find out
if radiation to my legs would help them heal.
Essentially, he said that radiation would not likely offer improvement,
but would be something to consider to prevent the legs from getting worse. We decided to keep radiation on the
backburner among our treatment options.
Dr. Bonomi decided to have me start getting an Avastin
infusion as a booster for the Tarceva.
Avastin isn’t a chemotherapy drug, but works with chemo drugs by cutting
off the blood supply to the lung cancer cell and starving the cell. I have only had two infusions so far so it’s
too soon to tell if it is doing any good.
However, the tumor markers in my blood jumped significantly, which the
doctor suspects is a reaction to the Avastin.
In early May, I had a fall when I lost my balance on my
walker. At the time, everything felt and
looked fine – no damage done. But a few
days later my left calf and shin and both feet swelled up to the point the skin
was purple and blue and the tissue underneath it was rock hard with no give at
all. While I was at physical therapy later on,
the doctor who works there looked at my feet and legs and sent me to the
emergency room to have them x-rayed to make sure there was no fracture or
tear. The good news is there wasn’t –
just a sub dermal hematoma (deep bruise).
The better news is there was no sign of a blood clot, which I’d acquired
while in the hospital in March. It’s the
blood thinner I’ve been on for the blood clot that caused the delayed reaction
of the bruising to the fall. In spite of
the blood clot being gone, I still need to get the daily blood thinner shots
for another few months to make sure the clots don’t come back.
For this month, my feet have gotten progressively worse and
last week, it took Doug and both of his parents to lift my feet from step to
step going up the stairs. I can’t feel my
feet at all and have to be careful not to let one step on top of the other or
trip as the tips of my toes get stuck on the floor. I got braces
for both of my legs as part of PT to give me more strength and stability. I think they make a little difference, but
not a lot. My “daytime” physical therapy
finished yesterday. From now on, I am at “outpatient” physical therapy twice a
week for 45 minutes each visit, still with the same PT provider organization.
In spite of the outward problems I am having with my feet
and legs, the MRI scan I had on Thursday of this past week showed stability in
the meningeal lining of the lower spine and may even indicate a slight
improvement in the amount of lesions there. Dr. Maurerwa, the radiation
oncologist, sat in with us to look at the results of the MRI to the spine and
we all once again agreed it wasn’t the right time to do radiation to the
legs. Dr. Bonomi decided it was time to
add Tagrisso to the cancer treatment mix along with the Tarceva. The idea behind this is that the particular
medications in Tarceva work well for the mutations in the brain and the
spine. The Tagrisso medication has a lot
of success with the lungs and other areas where the cancer has metastasized. The hope is that, between these two drugs,
all the cancer in my body will be kept under control. It’s a new frontier in the cancer landscape
so we are just experimenting to see what will work.
The fact that we don’t have a pre-defined path for treatment
is disconcerting to me. But I am glad
the medical staff is willing to try new things to help me get better.
So that’s what’s been going on with me. It has been a very challenging time and there
has been some rough news to process. I’ve been given little hope by some
medical practitioners that I will walk again.
But Dr. Bonomi still keeps that as a goal. At least I got that going for me.
3 comments:
Hard to hear you're having worse problems with your legs and feet, DonnaLee...am so sorry. The Tagrisso sounds quite promising though! Am keeping you and Doug in love & light...
Peg xoxo
Keep the fight and the positivity. I have always admired your analytical and practical mind and positive can do nature and that was way before the big C. Thinking of you and will make another visit. Luv to you & Doug and hang tough. Looking forward to laughing with you two again soon.
Keep the fight and the positivity. I have always admired your analytical and practical mind and positive can do nature and that was way before the big C. Thinking of you and will make another visit. Luv to you & Doug and hang tough. Looking forward to laughing with you two again soon.
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